Mary Morris

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Mary Morris bigraphy, stories - British actress

Mary Morris : biography

13 December 1915 – 14 October 1988

Mary Morris (Mary Lilian Agnes Morris, 13 December 1915 – 14 October 1988) was a British actress.

Television

  • The Philco Television Playhouse
  • An Age of Kings
  • Interpol Calling
  • A for Andromeda
  • The Andromeda Breakthrough
  • The Spread of the Eagle (Shakespeare’s Roman plays) Cleopatra
  • Ghost Squad
  • Londoners
  • Thirty-Minute Theatre
  • The Prisoner
  • Theatre 625
  • Men of Iron
  • Play of the Month
  • Hunter’s Walk
  • An Unofficial Rose
  • Boy Dominic
  • Ballet Shoes
  • Play for Today
  • Full Circle
  • Anna Karenina
  • King Richard the Second
  • Doctor Who (Kinda)
  • Seaton’s Aunt
  • Diana
  • The Life and Death of King John
  • Sunday Premiere: Claws
  • The Ray Bradbury Theater
  • Campion

Filmography

  • Victoria the Great
  • Prison Without Bars
  • The Spy in Black
  • Who Killed Jack Robins?
  • The Thief of Bagdad
  • Major Barbara
  • Pimpernel Smith
  • Undercover
  • The Agitator
  • The Man from Morocco
  • Train of Events
  • The Pythoness
  • High Treason
  • The Face of Love

Life and career

She was the daughter of Herbert Stanley Morris, the botanist, and his wife Sylvia Ena de Creft-Harford. She was educated at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art.

She made her stage debut in Lysistrata at the Gate Theatre, London, in 1935. In 1943, she played Anna Petrovitch in the Ealing war movie Undercover as the wife of a Serbian guerrilla leader. She played Professor Madeleine Dawnay in the science-fiction television drama A for Andromeda (and its sequel, The Andromeda Breakthrough), and the female Number Two in the episode Dance of the Dead of the TV series The Prisoner (1967).

She also appeared on television in Doctor Who in 1982 in the story Kinda, playing the shaman Panna opposite Peter Davison. Other television appearances included the Countess Vronsky in Anna Karenina (1977, PBS), the macabre, ancient relative in the Walter De La Mare story Seaton’s Aunt (1983, PBS) and the formidable matriarch in Police at the Funeral ( 1989, PBS).

She played Peter Pan on two occasions: once on the stage (as a Gypsy boy) and once as Number Two dressing up as him at a masquerade ball in an episode of television program The Prisoner called Dance of the Dead (The Prisoner).

She died from heart failure on 14 October 1988 in Aigle, Switzerland.